Alarmingly so, Britons are now spending more than they are earning by use of personal loans and credit cards. Is the hole becoming too big to get out of?
So do secured loans make sense? While secured loans can make financial sense in certain circumstances, as borrower, you should carefully assess the terms and conditions attached to the loan. You also must be certain that you can repay the loan. The lender enjoys the security aspect of the loan, not the borrower. If you cannot handle the repayment, the lender can forcibly sell your house to recover the loan.
This is why many consider the secured loan as a last resort and that the only justifiable reason for such a borrowing option is a need to reduce or consolidate existing debt costs.
The two leading reasons for taking out a secured loan are unsecured debt consolidation and financing home improvements.
Other popular reasons for secured borrowing are mainly buying a new car, paying for a wedding and buying property abroad.
Given the UK public's current appetite for borrowing, the secured loans industry is unlikely to go into recession. Datamonitor research expects such loan advances to reach £51 billion by 2008.
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